Leigh Mercer (1893–1977) was a British people writer of wordplay and recreational mathematics who is best known for devising the palindrome "".Published in Notes and Queries, 13 Nov. 1948, according to The Yale Book of Quotations, F. R. Shapiro, ed. (2006, ).A. Ross Eckler: Leigh Mercer, Palindromist. In: Word Ways. Volume 24, Issue 3, 1991, Article 2, p. 131–138 [2]
Word Ways called him "a luxuriant source of verbal exotica and linguistic curiosa." Among his palindromes are "Sums are not set as a test on Erasmus."
Leigh Mercer obfuscated details about himself, using pseudonyms such as the palindromic "Roger G. M'Gregor" when he registered to join the National Puzzlers' League. In a 1991 profile of Mercer in Word Ways, A. Ross Eckler Jr. wrote that Mercer had stressed he was not merely a "'drome man" and had "a number of hobbies".
The Times called him "a king-pin of this game called palindromes, and whenever you pick up an American book on the subject you are likely to see his name indexed."
In the 1940s, Mercer collected thousands of index cards that has been left in the trash by his employer, Rawlplug, and used them to copy the centers of potential palindromes. In 1946, he came up with "Plan a canal p" which he admitted was "not very hopeful looking" though it became "".
Mercer made many palindrome submissions to Notes and Queries but did not always claim authorship even when he had indeed penned the palindromes.
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